By Gustavo Morello
Holy Week and Easter are perhaps the most important days in the Christian calendar. Many associate those celebrations with church services, processions, candles, incense, fasting and penances.
However, there is another tradition that many Christians follow 鈥 that of tattooing. Historically, Easter was an among some Christian groups. Today, Christian tattooing happens in many parts of the world and all year around. Some Christians visiting Jerusalem around Easter will get a tattoo of a cross, or a lamb, usually on their forearms.
As a sociologist of religion and a Jesuit Catholic priest, I have as . I have interviewed tattoo artists in Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Loreto in Italy who have been continuing and recreating the tradition of Christian tattooing. Evidence is clear the practice started shortly after Jesus鈥 crucifixion and spread across Europe in later centuries.
The first Christian tattoos
The Romans, like the Greeks, and prisoners, usually with letters or words on their foreheads that indicated their crime. Soon after Jesus鈥 death, around the year 30 C.E., they started enslaving and tattooing Christians with the marks 鈥淎M鈥 鈥 meaning 鈥渁d metalla,鈥 or condemned to work in the mines, a punishment that often resulted in death.
who were not enslaved of the early Christian signs such as fish or lambs in solidarity and to show that they identified with Jesus.
There were , so the words 鈥渟tizo,鈥 鈥渟ignum鈥 and 鈥渟tigma鈥 were used. The word also referred to the marks of nails on Jesus鈥 hands and foot, as a result of his crucifixion. Christians often got their own 鈥渟tigmas鈥: a sign 鈥 usually a cross 鈥 in Jerusalem to honor Christ鈥檚 martyrdom.
The beginning of a tradition
There are several documented accounts of the tradition.
One from the third century mentions getting tattoos of fish and crosses.
Another tells about the commentary that Procopius of Gaza, a theologian who lived between 475 and 538 C.E., wrote on the after he found that many Christians living in the Holy Land had a cross tattooed on their wrists. 鈥淪till others will write on their hand, 鈥楾he Lord鈥檚,鈥 and will take the name Israel,鈥 he noted.
When a plague hit the Scythians, nomadic people living around the Black Sea, in 600 C.E., tattoos were believed to provide protection from the deadly disease. , one of the last historians of late antiquity, mentioned that missionaries among them recommended that 鈥渢he foreheads of the young be tattooed with this very sign鈥 鈥 meaning that of a cross.
Many testimonies mentioned returning from the Holy Land with a tattoo during the Middle Ages 鈥 a tradition that continued , between the 16th and 18th centuries.
Christian tattoos in Great Britain
Other cultures used tattoos in different ways. When Romans came in contact with the Celts tribes that inhabited the British Isles in 400 C.E., they because they were covered in .

Pope Gregory the Great sent envoys to convert the Celts to Christianity, followed by a visit from another Vatican delegation. While missionaries were against 鈥減agan tattooing,鈥 both delegations agreed that tattoos done for the Christian god were fine. The members of the second delegation in the late 700s even said, 鈥淚f anyone were to undergo this injury of staining for the sake of God, he would receive a .鈥
Similar was the conclusion of the , a church gathering in Northern England in 787: Tattoos done for the right god were acceptable. At that time, the Anglo-Saxon elite also had tattoos; the bishop of York, , for example, got a tattoo of a cross.
Tattoos in Italy
Around the 1300s, as the Christian kingdoms in the Holy Land were losing control with the coming of the Ottomans, there appeared in Italy shrines called 鈥淪acri Monti.鈥 These shrines were placed on 鈥渉oly mountains鈥 where devotees could pilgrimage safely, instead of risking their lives going to Jerusalem, which by then was under the control of the Ottomans.
These shrines were established in cities such as Naples, Varallo and Loreto. in some of these shrines. One place was Loreto鈥檚 sanctuary, established in the early 1300s. A relic from the 鈥淗oly House,鈥 which, according to the Christian tradition, is the house where the Virgin Mary is believed to have received the news that she will bear God鈥檚 son, was brought to Loreto鈥檚 sanctuary.
Tattooing in Loreto鈥檚 sanctuary was a communal activity, done by carpenters, shoemakers and artisans, who
during the days of celebrations and tattooed whoever wanted to get a mark of their devotion. These tattoos typically used wood planks for transferring the design on the body, like a stamp. However, the city of Loreto banned tattooing for hygienic reasons in 1871, according to , an anthropologist, who was one of the first to document the practice.
But people kept getting them. A shoemaker, , was among those who kept doing tattoos in hiding during the 1940s.

Present but unseen
From the 1200s to the 1700s, the custom of was prevalent in Europe among peasants, seafarers, soldiers and artisans as much as among nuns and monks. They were getting crosses, images of the Virgin Mary, the name of Jesus, and some sentences from the Bible.
Following the Renaissance, however, European culture came to associate tattoos ,鈥 such as peoples in the colonies, criminals and poorer Catholics. Many European intellectuals more than a real religion.
The word 鈥渢attoo鈥 came to the Western languages after the French admiral and explorer Louis de Bougainville and British explorer James Cook returned from their trips to the South Pacific at the end of the 1700s. There, they saw local people getting marks on their bodies and using the word 鈥渢atau鈥 to name those drawings. However, it does not mean that tattoos came back at that time. They had never left.
The practice today
These days, some churches in the , such as some churches in Egypt, incorporate the practice of getting a tattoo into the baptismal rituals.
Indeed, Holy Land tattooing has never stopped. , whom I interviewed in 2022, is a 27th-generation tattooist 鈥 his family has been . Razzouk claims to have some of the 500-year-old wood planks his family used for tattooing.
Another tattoo artist whom I interviewed, Walid Ayash, does pilgrimage tattoos for those who visit the Nativity church in Bethlehem 鈥 a beloved custom among Arab Christians. He said that tattooing happens all year around, as long as there are pilgrims visiting the Nativity church. Although this year, as a result of the war in Gaza, to Jerusalem and Bethlehem.
In Italy, is working on recovering the tradition of religious tattooing in Loreto. In a 2023 interview with me, he explained how he has painstakingly replicated the designs of the wood planks, which are both in the Museum of the Holy House and the Folkloric Museum of Rome. In 2019, he opened a parlor where Leonardo Conditti used to work. Visitors to the parlor can choose among more than 60 designs for their tattoos, including the Virgin Mary of Loreto, crosses and representations of Jesus鈥 heart.
This Easter, as some Christians get tattoos, this history might serve as a reminder of tattooing as a legitimate Christian practice, one that has been in use since the beginnings of the Common Era.
This article is republished from , a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: ,
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Gustavo Morello does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Feature Image: Christian Palestinian tattoo artist Walid Ayash draws a tattoo on the arm of a Coptic Egyptian pilgrim on April 28, 2016, at his studio in Bethlehem.